Jeff Maki is a creative technologist, researcher and activist whose work examines and interprets the ordinary systems behind daily life.
His work provokes audiences to take a more active role in the management of public and private infrastructure—systems that increasingly represent power in everyday life.
Jeff’s work has been funded by NASA, Google, and the National Science Foundation; he is currently working with Publicworks Office.
standpipes
Standpipes are the backbone of a modern fire suppression system. Often, standpipes connect to fire sprinklers, the latter designed to automatically douse a fire when activated by heat. Fire sprinklers are enthusiastically endorsed by those with strong incentives for safety; installing (or not installing) fire sprinklers becomes an explicit value judgment on human life, visibly codified into a structure.
Using the methods of critical spatial practice, I wish to examine the conditions under which building owners are likely to install a fire sprinkler system. To facilitate the data collection process, I created an iPhone application called PhotoLocatr that geolocates and tags photos taken with a digital camera.
building code
New York City building code requires buildings to have signs that indicate to firefighters parameters of a standpipe or fire sprinkler system’s operation. The standard is set forth by a national rule-making body, the NFPA, in NFPA standard 14. The standard reads:
6.4.5.2.1 If automatic sprinklers are also supplied by the fire department connection, the sign or combination of signs shall indicate both designated services (e.g. “STANDPIPE AND AUTOSPKR,” or “AUTOSPKR AND STANDPIPE”).
You and I can see this standard manifested as signs on buildings across the nation. Standpipe/sprinkler protected buildings can fall into three main classifications: fully sprinklered, partially sprinklered, or not sprinklered.
Colored covers (or paint) on the standpipe indicate how the system works; red means the hookup connects to a standpipe only (i.e. does not feed sprinklers, or none are present); green means an automatic sprinkler system is present and connected to the hookup; aluminum color means sprinklers are present but not automatic (requires turn-on by the fire department), and yellow signifies a combination sprinkler/standpipe system (both are fed by a common standpipe).
See this document for more information about NYFD standpipe standards and usage.
data collection
My research process consisted of collecting geolocated standpipe photos in New York City (specifically Manhattan for now), and mapping the results by one of many dimensions (e.g. full, partial or no sprinkler coverage). To do this, I created a tool called PhotoLocatr that runs on the iPhone and makes use of Flickr to store and manage the photos.
Part of the collected data appears below:
analysis and conclusions

Raw data collected so far appears above (view on geocommons); orange dots represent “full coverage” by sprinklers, while grey dots represent partial or no coverage.
General observations include:
- Lobbies and halls are often protected, even if the entire building isn’t. This gives occupants more of a chance to escape a fire, but without the expense of adding sprinklers to every office or room.
- Compactor rooms and or garages are sometimes the only places protected by fire sprinklers.
- Older buildings usually have standpipes, but no sprinklers–not surprising, as installing sprinklers (and the necessary pipe) in an old building can be disruptive and prohibitively expensive, especially if one must do so in each of hundreds of rooms/offices.
- Most newer buildings, or buildings frequently renovated (think Midtown) often have sprinkler systems–again, making significant renovations to a building forces one to comply with modern building code, so no big surprise here.
- Every New York Public Library I passed had full sprinkler coverage.
- St. Vincents, a local hospital, has complete sprinkler coverage.
- MTA subway tunnels have standpipe hookups at the street level for firefighter use underground.
- ConEd installs sprinklers in and around their electrical transformers, making it easier for firefighters to extinguish electrical fires quickly and safely.
Update! See my article on the Infrastructurist for a summary of my findings around this project!
critical infrastructure
Critical Infrastructure is a walking/field guide intended for people who, as they move through the built urban environment, want to see and better understand infrastructure—and what stories these systems tell.
More →neighborhood nets
Neighborhood Networks is a long-term research project that combines community arts, participatory design, informal learning, and engineering to articulate and discover how communities use, or might use, emerging technologies.
More →friends of larimer
Friends of Larimer was initiated in collaboration with Alexandra Woolsey Puffer in the context of human-centered design methods and civic engagement. The project was created to encourage a more favorable environment for social change in a stressed Pittsburgh neighborhood.
More →mapmover
The Carbon Defense League and MapHub exhibited MapMover as part of Making Things Public: Atmospheres of Democracy at the ZKM Center for Art and Media in Karlsruhe, Germany. The installation consisted of two parts: a system to collect field recordings in the city of Pittsburgh, and a physical device in Karlsruhe to display them.
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